

74 reviews on Google
Woonhub Real Estate Agents: Your Partner in Selling and Buying Homes in Eindhoven Are you looking for a reliable real estate agent in Eindhoven, where transparency, honesty, and customization are central? Woonhub Real Estate Agents offers you exactly that! Located at Tarasconweg 2, we are the real estate agent of the future, where you determine which services you need and what you pay for. At Woonhub, we believe in clear communication a...
Current housing stock

Merckthoef 43
5641GE Eindhoven
€ 550.000,-

Abramsdreef 28
5503EE Veldhoven
€ 450.000,-

Hongerberg 20
5508BP Veldhoven
€ 579.000,-
Reviews (74)
steven camacho
I first met Alex, the owner of real estate agency Woonhub, and was impressed by his professionalism and commitment to delivering quality service. Based on this, we decided to hire him as our representative to sell my property. But when we officially started the sales process, his business partner Marten took over the representation – something I had never agreed to. From the beginning, the process was poorly handled. The real estate brochure contained several errors, despite us having provided all the correct documentation. Also, the asking price became a point of contention. Marten insisted on a significantly lower price than what the property was worth, making it seem as if he was only interested in a quick and easy sale rather than getting the best deal in a strong seller's market. Fortunately, my wife and I insisted on a higher price than what Marten recommended. Moreover, the information on Funda was completely incorrect, despite us having provided the correct data. Simple but crucial details, such as the year of construction, were wrong, which was incredibly frustrating. In addition, I work for a company where many employees are actively looking for homes, so I personally shared the ad internally. Six colleagues contacted me with interest, but experienced problems reaching Woonhub. Some were called back, but that never happened. Although I had explicitly agreed to reserve a certain number of viewings for my colleagues, the handling of these requests was unprofessional. Those who did get a viewing complained about Marten’s poor representation: he refused to show important parts of the property, such as the storage room, the bicycle shed and the electrical panel. Also, the buyer who ultimately won the bid shared her disappointment. She found Marten unfriendly and uninformed about the property. If it weren't for her father advising her to ignore the bad representation and focus on the property itself, she wouldn’t have even made an offer. When I discussed these concerns with Alex and Marten, they completely ignored the feedback. With so many complaints from my colleagues, the buyer and my own experience, it is clear that Woonhub lacks quality and professionalism. To top it all off, Alex showed up on the day of the house signing, but he didn't even bring a small celebratory gesture (such as a bottle of champagne), not for me, but for the buyer, who was making her first home purchase. Instead, Alex claimed that he would rather send a custom-made chocolate house than the traditional champagne. Months later, neither the buyer nor I ever received anything. Another example of their inconsistency. Ultimately, I feel sorry for Alex, who has a terrible business partner, but I am also disappointed in him because he committed to being my representative and then passed me on to someone else. The experience was frustrating from beginning to end. Terrible representation, poor quality of work – absolutely NOT recommended!
Ala Pluto
Very satisfied with Woonhub; the real estate agents are very professional, customer-friendly, think along with you and support you with advice and action. Very happy with both the sale of our old house and the purchase of our new home. It couldn't have gone better! Hats off!!!
Bart Alfrink
WARNING: DO NOT WORK WITH WOONHUB TOGETHER I will describe to you, based on an extensive case, why not. Woonhub is not affiliated with NVM and there's a reason for that. In the past year, I have dealt with Woonhub and am astonished by their way of operating. In March, I saw a fixer-upper for sale in Eindhoven. After viewing the property, I wanted to place my bid. The asking price was €325,000. When I wanted to submit my bid, I contacted Woonhub by phone; I wanted to offer €336,500 without a technical or financial reservation. It was a fixer-upper so there would always be more than €10,000 in defects found. Maarten from Woonhub insisted that I really needed to include a technical reservation, the selling party didn't know the house (family inheritance problems) and therefore didn’t know the condition of the house. Everyone would take a technical reservation and this would only serve so that if real major defects (cracks in building structures etc.) were to occur, you could withdraw from the purchase. I wouldn’t lose the property because of it. Unfortunately, my bid was not accepted; I was curious how much the property had been sold for in preparation for my future bidding process. Woonhub told me that the property had been sold for €305,000. I was naturally extremely surprised by this since my bid was €31,500 higher. Woonhub said that the selling party felt better about the buyer. This is quite striking considering we filled in an online bidding form. I contacted the selling party to inquire whether they were aware of my bid. They were aware of my bid but the selling party told me that they actually only had 1 bid. Woonhub had told the selling party that almost all bids included a technical reservation and that all these bids would expire since more than €10,000 in defects would be found. Except for 1 bid, which happened to be a friend's property flipper of Woonhub’s. During contact with the selling party, they indicated that they would actually prefer to sell the house to someone who wanted to live in it themselves, but they only had 1 bid. They wanted to get rid of the house as quickly as possible; they were dealing with a death in the family which caused much unrest and wanted to leave it at that. About 4 months later, I drove past the house and saw that nothing had happened yet, not even a cadastral change of ownership. I contacted the sellers again to see if the house had been sold and whether anything was still possible. The sale wasn’t going as hoped. The current buyer still had to sell a house through Woonhub (financial reservation). The seller indicated that he would still like to sell the house to me since I would take it without a financial reservation and he could put this unpleasant matter behind him as quickly as possible. He sent me the purchase agreement to see if there was any way out of it. I had this purchase agreement reviewed by a friend who is a real estate agent, and he called me back shocked. He had never seen such a ridiculous purchase agreement. The selling party, dealing with a bereavement, hired Woonhub to sell the house and therefore protect their interests. All Woonhub has done is protect their own interests – not getting the highest bid for the seller. No, all private buyers are directed towards a technical reservation. The friend's property flipper had a much lower bid submitted without a technical reservation, and the sellers were led to believe that all other bids would expire. It’s scandalous how you can scam people like this who are in a grieving situation, purely to be able to sell the property to a friendly property flipper so you can pocket brokerage fees again after renovation. Be careful, do not work with them. There are many good reliable NVM-affiliated real estate agents that you can happily cooperate with.